Why I Stopped Looking at Traditional Fencing (And the “Living Wall” I Built Instead)

stopped looking traditional

What It Cost Me Compared With Traditional Fencing

Living wall fence cost comparison with traditional fencing, planters, plants, and irrigation materials

My costs were spread across a few categories

My budget went into the frame, anchors, planters, soil, plants, ties, and irrigation. In broad terms, a DIY eco-friendly fencing alternative like this can range from a few hundred dollars for a small screen to several thousand for a larger, polished setup.

That range is huge because materials and plant sizes change everything. Mature plants cost more, but they also buy you time.

Upfront cost vs long-term tradeoffs

A basic traditional fence often gives instant privacy faster. But a living wall fence gives beauty, biodiversity, and design value that a plain panel just doesn’t.

Ongoing costs also look different. Instead of staining boards, you’re paying for water, fertilizer, replacements, and seasonal care.

Where I saved and where I should have spent more

I saved money by doing the install myself and starting with younger plants. I probably should have spent a bit more on irrigation parts from the beginning instead of trying to piece things together cheaply.

That would’ve saved me some very sweaty mid-summer frustration. Lesson learned.

Is it actually budget-friendly?

It can be, especially if you build in stages. A targeted privacy landscaping on a budget plan is often smarter than trying to screen every inch at once.

If you want instant, full-height, zero-gap privacy, a fence may win on speed. But if you want a long-term biophilic backyard design feature, the value equation shifts.

So was it better than a fence in the end? For me, yes. But there are a few cases where I’d still tell someone to go traditional, so hit the next button below.

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